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Home » Skills Check: Posture Patrol Drill
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Skills Check: Posture Patrol Drill

David LuttrellBy David LuttrellSeptember 14, 20254 Mins Read
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Skills Check: Posture Patrol Drill

There’s something about the first time someone calls out your “stance” that makes you feel like you’ve been caught doing something terribly unflattering with your body. Shoulders? Too high. Hips? All wrong. Feet? A mystery. And then the classic correction: “Fix your stance.” But here’s the truth most instructors won’t tell you right away—there isn’t one magical, one-size-fits-all shooting stance. There’s only the one that works for you. So, before you get stuck trying to cram yourself into someone else’s silhouette, let’s do some honest exploring. No, not with hiking boots and granola. This is a posture audit that reveals how your body works best under pressure, under recoil, and under that pesky little voice in your head saying, “This still doesn’t feel right.”

Drill: Posture Patrol – Find Your Function

Objective:

To identify the most efficient and effective shooting posture for you by exploring how different upper body positions affect recoil control, sight recovery, and overall balance.

Gear Needed:

  • Your pistol (red dot or irons)
  • Eye and ear protection
  • A safe live-fire environment (or dry-fire version if indoors)
  • A phone or notebook for observations
  • Optional: a trusted instructor or buddy for feedback

Warm-Up:

Begin with five rounds (live or dry) using your default stance. Observe your sight movement, your body’s balance, and the speed of your sight returning to alignment. Rate how it felt not just what it looked like. Ready? Let’s explore.

Phase 1: The “Charlie’s Angel” Lean-Back

Heart Behind Hips

Adopt a wide stance with your upper body leaning backward and your hips forward, as if you’re on the poster of a 70s detective show. You’ll recognize this one, often seen at ranges where recoil has bullied new shooters into retreating behind their belt buckle.

What to observe:

  • Sight bounce and delay in recovery
  • Inability to apply consistent grip pressure
  • How your balance shifts to your heels
  • Feeling like you’re about to tip over when you press the trigger

Key lesson: When your heart is behind your hips, your body absorbs recoil poorly. Energy travels backward and downward with no structural support to trap it.

Phase 2: The “Royal Guard” Erect Posture

Heart Over Hips

Stand tall and proud like you’re being inspected, chest directly over hips, knees locked, and shoulders stacked. While this may feel “formal” and grounded, it often fails to connect you to the gun dynamically.

What to observe:

  • Increased vertical muzzle flip
  • Difficulty resetting sights efficiently
  • Disconnection between grip pressure and stance
  • Where do you feel the force of recoil traveling?

Key lesson: Upright may look commanding, but it leaves the body stiff. Recoil moves the gun and your entire upper body like a flagpole in the wind.

Phase 3: The “Forward Plank” Performance Posture

Heart Forward of Hips

Now lean your upper body slightly forward from the waist—think of your sternum reaching toward the target. Knees soft, heels grounded, weight toward the balls of your feet. There’s no exaggerated squat here just a subtle “athletic ready” position that primes your body to work with the gun.

What to observe:

  • Sight movement is tighter, flatter, faster
  • Hands stay connected to the gun during recoil
  • Energy moves intoyour frame and is absorbed through your legs
  • Recovery is natural and repeatable

Key lesson: This isn’t just a stance it’s a recoil trap. By placing your heart forward, you engage your core, stack your skeletal structure for support, and create a pathway for recoil to disperse efficiently through your whole body.



It may take a bit of time and some experimentation to discover which stance works best for you. Feeling what doesn’t work will help you find what does.


Final Notes: Becoming a Human Shock Absorber

Your shooting stance isn’t about how it looks it’s about how well your body manages energy. Recoil is energy. If your stance traps it efficiently, you’ll see faster sight recovery, less fatigue, and tighter shot groups. If your posture sends that energy bouncing around like a pinball, your performance will always be a little chaotic.

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